A former Baylor official is now going public with her concerns about what she believes is the continuing mismanagement of sexual assault allegations at the school.

Patty Crawford’s comments come months after an independent investigation into the sex assault claims found there were 17 women who had reported sexual or domestic assaults involving 19 Baylor University athletes since 2011. Those allegations included four reports of gang rapes.

“My kids expect their mother to do the right thing, and that's what I've done,” Crawford said.

Crawford was Baylor University's Title IX coordinator and it was her job to make sure the university complied with federal law that prohibits sex discrimination. She put her job on the line by filing a complaint against her own employer with the department of education.

She says her supervisors were not pleased by her filing the complaint, so she resigned.

“If I expect students to report to me horrific things that have happened to them, I have to have the courage to report publically what Baylor's doing to me,” Crawford said.

Crawford says even as recently as September, the culture at Baylor had not changed.

"The university did not want these sexual assaults to become public knowledge. They did not want to acknowledge that students were having sex, drinking, and non-consensual abuse was happening because it did not protect the brand or image Christian philosophy model they stood behind,” Crawford said.

Crawford says The Wall Street Journal report revealing 19 athletes were involved in assaulting 17 women is only the tip of the iceberg.

Coach Art Briles was fired earlier this year along with the athletic director as part of the fallout from the scandal. President Ken Starr was removed from his post by regents and he later resigned as chancellor.